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    Daisy Of The Great Gatsby Chapter One of The Great Gatsby is not extensive‚ however still reveals a great deal regarding the individuals in the novel. The narrator‚ Nick Carraway‚ sets the novel on the shore of Long Island during the 1920’s. He introduces and analyzes the people who drift into his life throughout this chapter. Daisy‚ a well-off young woman who is Nick’s cousin-twice removed‚ is introduced as a morose‚ shallow‚ and realistic character. Initially‚ Daisy Buchanan comes off as

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    Chapter 9‚ the last chapter of the novel‚ is used by Fitzgerald to create a sense of finality for the reader‚ suggesting ‘the party was over’. This chapter allows him to make his final comment on the unfulfilling nature of the American Dream‚ and the nature of the people that lived in the ‘Roaring Twenties’. The chapter is made for the obvious purpose of being the conclusion to the story. Rather than leave the ending ambiguous as many authors do‚ Fitzgerald wraps up the narrative decisively. This

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    Write about some of the ways Fitzgerald tells the story in Chapter 3. Fitzgerald tells the story in chapter 3 in a number of ways‚ firstly‚ using setting. The atmosphere of chapter 3 contrasts effectively with the sleazy atmosphere of chapter 2‚ the party is extravagant and highlights the restless need of society to be entertained. His use of imagery tells us a lot about the type of party Gatsby was shaving‚ and even more about the type of people attending it‚ "In his blue gardens men and girls

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    The Great Gatsby is set during the roaring 20’s smack dab in the Empire State. Told from the perspective of the Midwestern transplant Nick Carraway‚ the story centers around the mysterious and suspiciously rich Jay Gatsby--his next-door neighbor. In the first chapters of the novel‚ Nick is seen reuniting with his distant cousin‚ both in gene and mind‚ Daisy Buchanan. She and her ridiculously rich husband Tom introduce him to their dear friend‚ Jordan Baker‚ an excellent golfer‚ but a notorious cheater

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    Analyse F Scott Fitzgerald’s presentation of his first person narrator‚ Nick Carraway‚ in Chapter 1 of “The Great Gatsby” Fitzgerald casts Nick Carraway as our narrator and guide throughout the Novel‚ The Great Gatsby. Immediately we discover that he is from an affluent socio-economic background and makes attempts to prove that he is from “good stock”‚ boasting about his family being descendant from “The Dukes of Buccleuch” illustrating the American obsession with lineage‚ and how it was often

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    in Chapter 4 Fitzgerald opens the chapter with more rumours around the infamous Mr Gatsby that we still know little about‚ such as ’he once killed a man’‚ we met him briefly in the previous chapter but still find him mysterious‚ as even Jordan ‚who claimed to know him didn’t believe he was’ an oxford man’. Nicks own perception of the character is not fixed as he juxtaposes between flattery and resentment. Nick goes on to name and describe all the characters he has met whom had visited Gatsby‚ the

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    the most important themes in The Great Gatsby. The success story is that hard work allows a man to become incredibly wealthy. Fitzgerald shows how the American Dream can fail in The Great Gatsby. Even though Gatsby has worked hard‚ he makes his money by bootlegging. His purpose is in attaining the love of Daisy‚ a girl whom he had a relationship before the war. The multiple people who attend Gatsby’s parties show the greedy want for wealth. As Nick explains in Chapter 9‚ the American Dream was originally

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    Plot Summary: Beginning- Exposition: Characters - pay attention to capitalization!! (5 Points) - Protagonist Name: Georgia Antagonist(s) Name(s): Robert‚ Dorothy Conflict (5 Points) - Character vs. Society‚ Character vs. Self The protagonist‚ Georgia‚ is struggling with being trapped inside her Newport summer house (Rosecliff) by her strict parents‚ but her perspective changes when she is transported into the speakeasy and party scene of the 1920s‚ and realizes the excessive freedom isn’t

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    At dawn‚ Nick goes to Gatsby‚ who says that he waited for Daisy until four o’clock‚ but that nothing happened. Nick tells him he should leave before they trace the car‚ but Gatsby doesn’t want to because he doesn’t want to leave Daisy. He tells Nick about how much he loved her when they first met. She was the first girl he wanted to seem worthy to even though he was a penniless young man. Eventually‚ he loved her so much that he started to feel as though they were married. She promised she would

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    legalities did not matter as long as the people got what they wanted. The people sought to use the new-gained wealth to make their fantasy ideals to become a reality and the “American Dream” was the popular phrase used to describe their mindsets. Gatsby is longing to reunite with his love‚ and he spends a fortune to have it all setup and does not even stop at the face of her husband. To put the novel into a sum‚ the people of the Jazz Age flare up their monotonous life with corrupted love and the

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